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Show TTllEIllS i i Declaration of War on Austria-Hungary Austria-Hungary Increases List Over 1,000,000. CENSUS BUREAU REPORT Poles of Various Countries Here in Great Numbers Many of Unidentified Allegiance. WASHINGTON, Dec. 6. Declaration of war on Austria-Hungary will add 700,000 men over 21 years of age to the Allied enemies within the borders of the United States. Figures compiled by the census bureau bu-reau showed that in 1910 there wore 678,667 male subjects of the dual monarchy mon-archy In this country and 184,654 former for-mer subjects who had taken the oath of allegiance to the United States and were becoming naturalized. -The number num-ber of alien women brings the total to more than 1,000,000. Polish speaking residents in 1910 numbered 943,781 of whom more than one-half, 552.151 came from lands of the former kingdom now under the foreign domination of Germany and Austria-Hungary. Almost all the others came from Russia Poland. Austrian Poles numbered 329.418; German Poles 190,096 and Hungarian Poles 22,637. Statistics on the Austrian men in the United States show that of a total of 609,773 approximately one-fourth have become citizens of this countrv There 149,914 naturalized Austrians, 58,636 who had taken out their first papers, 349,431 who remained aliens and 51,456 whose citizenship .was not ascertained, but the majority of whom probably remain subjects of the foreign for-eign power. Of the 255,844 Hungarians resident here only 36,610 had become citizens in 1910; 25,756 had signified their intention to become citizens by taking out first papers 174,518 remained remain-ed aliens and 18,960 were of unidentified unidenti-fied allegiance but are presumed to have retained their Hungarian citizenship. citizen-ship. oo Drug clerks in Kansas City, Mo., are organized to reduce' their 90 and 95-hour 95-hour work week. .... m |